Facies architecture and time stratigraphic relationships of a confined trunk-tributary valley fill and unconfined fluvial system in the backwater of the Turonian Ferron-Notom Delta, Utah, U.S.A.

2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-91
Author(s):  
David Kynaston ◽  
Janok P. Bhattacharya ◽  
Brad S. Singer ◽  
Brian R. Jicha

ABSTRACT This paper documents a tidally incised, mudstone-prone tributary valley fill linked to a trunk valley in the backwater limit of the Turonian Notom Delta of the Ferron Sandstone Member, Utah. High-resolution 3D photogrammetry models were used to correlate a 20-m-deep valley between 32 measured sections over a 1 km2 area. A GPS survey and GIS geostatistical tools were used to restore the morphology of the tributary valley. The restored valley floor is interpreted as a surface of tidal erosion, based on the overlying facies and surface morphology. Morphological similarities exist between this tributary valley and modern analogs observed in northern Australia, the Memramcook tributary in the Bay of Fundy, and Pleistocene sediments in the Gulf of Thailand. 40Ar/39Ar dating of sanidine crystals using multi-collector mass spectrometry allow for a re-evaluation of depositional rates and timing of 32 fluvial aggradation cycles (FACs) and 9 fluvial-aggradation cycle sets (FAC sets) in this sequence. The new dates show that the entire sequence was deposited in 15 ± 5 kyr, and show that Milankovitch cycles cannot account for the internal complexity of this fluvial stratigraphy, indicating likely autogenic control of the FAC sets. The lateral extent of FACs in floodplain deposits mapped in outcrop are correlated over tens to hundreds of meters, and scale to estimated channel widths reflecting the autogenic control. FAC sets can be correlated for up to 10 km along depositional strike, which suggest controls unrelated to the dynamics of individual channels and may show some elements of allogenic climate-driven processes.

2011 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 779-792 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.G.F. Long ◽  
T. Ulrich ◽  
B.S. Kamber

Local gold concentrations are found in laterally extensive pyrite-bearing, framework-supported, cobble and boulder conglomerates in the basal 30 m of the Mississagi Formation in the south eastern part of the Huronian outcrop belt. These were deposited as part of a valley-fill succession, in shallow gravel-bed braided rivers with local hyperconcentrated flows. The basal contact with underlying Archean psammites is typically highly irregular and shows no obvious sign of weathering suggesting that deposition took place soon after retreat of the glaciers responsible for deposition of the Ramsey Lake Formation. Highest gold concentrations are associated with moderately well-sorted medium to large pebble conglomerate that show some signs of reworking during low flow events. Depositional elements are typically lenticular and of limited lateral extent. Unlike the older pyritic quartz-pebble conglomerates at the base of the Matinenda Formation in the Elliot Lake and Blind River areas, these conglomerates contain no uraninite and are polymict with material derived from a highly restricted catchment area with marked local and regional topographic relief. Porous detrital allogenic pyrite and euhedral post-depositional pyrite have overlapping, generally positive δ34S values, indicating a closed system during diagenesis and metamorphism. The presence of biotite-enriched rims on many of the metavolcanic and metasedimentary clasts in the conglomerates suggests that gold was partly leached from the allogenic pyrite grains at the peak of the Penokean Orogeny at 1.85–1.5 Ga. The potential source of the Au-bearing detrital allogenic pyrite appears to be an as yet undiscovered Archean volcanic-hosted massive sulfide (VHMS) deposit located 1 to 8 km north of the deposit.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 2710-2717 ◽  
Author(s):  
John D. Greenough ◽  
Lois M. Jones ◽  
David J. Mossman

Early Jurassic quartz-normative tholeiitic basalts occur in a series of fault blocks at four localities (Cap d'Or, Parrsboro, Five Islands, and Bass River) along the north shore of the Bay of Fundy. Major-element and trace-element data show that they represent outliers of the North Mountain basalt (NMB), which from the south shore of the Bay of Fundy are well-known. Diagnostic 87Sr/86Sr ratios (≈0.70609) indicate that a thick (>90 m) flow at Five Islands and Cap d'Or represents the lower unit of NMB, thus extending this single flow's lateral extent to 230 km. Thin flows overlying the thick flow at Cap d'Or suggest that the middle unit of NMB also occurs on the north shore. A thick flow at McKay Head (Parrsboro area) shows a variable Sr isotopic composition that is probably a result of metasomatism (with Rb addition) along the Cobequid fault. The average composition (0.70656) is similar to that of the upper unit of NMB. If the flow does represent the upper unit, then four thinner flows above it form an "overlying unit" not recognized along North Mountain. Although the nature of contacts between the middle and upper units was not observed, a lack of sedimentary rocks between all other flow units indicates that little or no sedimentation occurred between basalt eruptions. North shore basalts appear less mafic (more evolved) than south shore basalts, providing support for the hypothesis of differentiation during northeasterly magma migration through dykes that fed 230 km long fissure eruptions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. T1037-T1055
Author(s):  
Jerson J. Tellez Rodriguez ◽  
Matthew J. Pranter ◽  
Rex Cole

The Lower Cretaceous Burro Canyon Formation in the southwestern Piceance Basin, Colorado, is composed of deposits that represent a braided fluvial system with high net to gross that transitions stratigraphically upward into a low net-to-gross, low-sinuosity, meandering fluvial system. The fluvial deposits are composed of multiple upward-fining, conglomeratic-to-sandstone successions forming bars and bar sets that exhibit inclined heterolithic strata that we have interpreted to have formed by oblique and downstream accretion. We used well-exposed outcrops, detailed measured sections, and unmanned aerial system-based imagery to describe the fluvial architecture of the Late Cretaceous formation using a hierarchical approach. We described the Burro Canyon Formation as comprising sandstone-rich amalgamated channel complexes (ACC) overlain by non- to semiamalgamated channel complexes. The lower interval of the formation is composed of ACC that contain channel-fill elements with cross-stratification and numerous truncated contacts. These stacked channel-fill elements exhibit an apparent width range of 137–1300 ft (40–420 m) and a thickness range of 5–60 ft (1.5–18 m). The upper interval of the Burro Canyon Formation comprises mudstone-prone intervals of the nonamalgamated channel complex with isolated channel-fill elements interbedded with floodplain mudstones that represent a period of relatively high base level. Associate channel fill elements range in apparent width from 200 to 1000 ft (60 to 300 m) and thickness from 20 to 30 ft (6 to 18 m). The characteristics and spatial distribution of architectural elements of the Burro Canyon Formation correspond to one depositional sequence. The erosional basal surface of the formation, as well as lateral changes in thickness and net to gross, suggest that the Burro Canyon Formation within this study area was deposited as an incised valley fill. Fluvial deposits of the Burro Canyon Formation serve as outcrop analogs for subsurface interpretations in similar reservoirs.


2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (8) ◽  
pp. 1131-1149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Becky Rogala ◽  
Philip W Fralick ◽  
Larry M Heaman ◽  
Riku Metsaranta

The 950 m thick Sibley Group is a relatively flat-lying assemblage of siliciclastic and chemical sedimentary rocks exposed from the northwest shore of Lake Superior to the Lake Nipigon region of Ontario. Remnants of the Sibley Group occur in an ovoid area that sagged at ~1.5 Ga, creating accommodation space for braided fluvial sediments, derived as either first or multicycle detritus from the Trans-Hudson Orogen. This was followed by a transgressive episode and deposition of lacustrine siliciclastics and evaporites. An influx of sediment from the south occurred immediately prior to final contraction of the lacustrine system and deposition of strandline, stromatolite-bearing carbonates. The change in paleoslope was accompanied by development of a north–south-oriented half-graben. Overlying subaerial deposits represent deposition on a sabkha or saline mud flat. This assemblage is abruptly succeeded upward by flooding of the basin and major deltaic progradation and capped by a delta-top fluvial system with extensive preservation of floodplain deposits. The majority of the deltaic sediment was derived from Proterozoic sources to the south. An unconformity separates this assemblage from a thick succession of sandstone deposited as an aeolian dune field, with detritus probably coming from as far as the New Quebec Orogen to Baltica region. The geochemistry of medium-grained sandstone denotes that sediment became more mature and quartz-rich upsection and that the source areas evolved to more felsic and less alkalic compositions. Paleomagnetically correlated units in the Belt Supergroup, Apache Group, and Troy Quartzite in western North America indicate that the broad climatic fluctuations recorded in the Sibley Group may represent continent-wide events.


2003 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 415
Author(s):  
R.J. Willink ◽  
R.L. Harvey

The New Royal Oil Field is located in a structural embayment on the eastern flank of the Kincora High, western Surat Basin, Queensland. Hydrocarbons have accumulated in the Middle Triassic Showgrounds Sandstone, specifically in a thin basal fluvial unit, interpreted as part of an incised valley fill deposit, that displays excellent reservoir properties but is highly localised in its distribution. The Showgrounds Sandstone overlies either granitic basement or a veneer of Permian clastics including coals. Whereas the Showgrounds Sandstone is an established hydrocarbon bearing reservoir in a number of structural settings elsewhere in the basin, trapping in the New Royal field is primarily stratigraphic.Since its discovery in November 1995, various exploration techniques and technologies have been applied, including the acquisition of 3D seismic data, in an attempt to understand the trapping mechanism of this field and predict its lateral extent, albeit with mixed success. Twelve wells have now been drilled in the greater New Royal field area, only four of which were successfully completed as oil producers from the basal Showgrounds Sandstone. Production to date totals 1.1 million barrels of oil and reservoir simulation studies indicate that original-oil-in-place was 4.6 million barrels.This case history serves as a timely reminder that despite all the technology now available to the petroleum geoscientist, serendipity still plays an important role in the discovery and successful appraisal of certain hydrocarbon accumulations in the Surat Basin.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 6-31
Author(s):  
Nora Nieminski ◽  
Cari Johnson

Range Creek Canyon, located within the Book Cliffs of eastern Utah, contains some of the most abundant and well-preserved archaeological sites in North America. Its cliffs and landscapes provide a canvas for rock art panels and a foundation for granaries, ruins, and artifacts of the prehistoric Fremont Indians. In order to place these Range Creek sites within a geologic context, an illustrated geologic field guide was created for the general public. The guide focuses on the major bedrock formations that crop out in the canyon, as well as many indicators that facilitate geologic interpretation of these rocks. Outcrops of the Paleogene Flagstaff and Colton Formations (~58 to 48 million years old) in Range Creek Canyon were investigated in order to interpret their depositional environments. The lacustrine Flagstaff Limestone contains limestone beds and fossils of freshwater gastropods, oysters, and turtles indicative of lake environments. The unit coarsens upward with an increase of interbedded sandstone, which was deposited in and near ancient river channels. This trend suggests dynamic levels of the ancient lake, with overall encroachment of river systems near the contact with the Colton Formation. The fluvial Colton Formation is characterized by discontinuous, stacked beds of sandstone, representing a succession of migrating river channels and floodplain deposits. The Colton Formation exhibits a general upward trend of increased grain size and increased channel belt (continuous sandstone beds) frequency and lateral extent, implying a transition to higher energy river systems through time. These dynamic, ancient rivers may have been flowing generally northward into Eocene Lake Uinta, recorded in deposits of the Green River Formation north of Range Creek Canyon.


1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (04) ◽  
pp. 341-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.D. White ◽  
M.D. Barton

Summary Quantitative models are needed to predict interactions between rock properties and drive mechanisms in geologically complex reservoirs. Analog studies using outcrop data provide insights for modeling, understanding, and predicting the behavior of oil and gas reservoirs. Stratigraphic cornerpoint grids preserve the geometries and facies distributions of outcrop data sets. Flow simulations of two outcrop exposures of sandstone-rich fluvial-deltaic tongues within the Cretaceous Age Ferron sandstone (Utah) revealed differences in fractional flow, recovery efficiency, and deliverability that can be related to stratigraphic setting. Compared with homogeneous models, models based on the landward-stepping tongue exposed at the Picture Flats locality had more tortuous flow paths and lower gas recovery efficiency. In the seaward-stepping tongue exposed at the Interstate 70 location, the displacement was layer like. Gas deliverability at the Interstate 70 locality varied with the well location; it was highest when the well penetrated high-permeability shallow-marine sediments and lowest when flow was restricted by a shale-lined valley-fill succession. Introduction Emerging technologies continue to improve reservoir modeling methods. Measurements such as borehole imaging and three dimensional (3D) seismic provide data at high density and resolution, and geostatistical methods enable construction of large, heterogeneous models.1 Cornerpoint grids with non-neighbor connections can represent complex geometries for reservoir simulation.2,3 However, we often lack the data and methods necessary to build detailed reservoir models at scales of interest. Outcrop studies provide data and insights to build models. The Ferron sandstone outcrop study combines regional stratigraphic relationships with a detailed reservoir-to interwell-scale view of layering, facies distribution, permeability, and flow behavior.4–8 The data sets discussed in this article contain hundreds of sandstone and shale layers and thousands of sedimentologic and petrophysical measurements. Layers are laterally discontinuous, nonrectangular, and nonhorizontal. Thin shales intermittently separate sandstone layers. Rock properties depend on facies, and sandstone layers may comprise more than one facies. These layer and lithofacies geometries are difficult to model using a Cartesian grid. Reservoir simulation models were built from layer, shale, and facies diagrams. Vertical measured sections recorded grain size, permeability, sedimentary structures, and facies. The diagrams were edited, sorted, and discretized to create stratigraphic cornerpoint grids that conform to observed layer geometry. These non-Cartesian grids used void blocks and non-neighbor connections extensively. Hierarchical layer ordering preserved stratigraphic grouping throughout the modeling process. The flow behavior of these models was predicted using a reservoir simulator.3 Geologic Setting. The Ferron sandstone is a lithostratigraphically defined member of the Mancos Shale Formation exposed in east-central Utah.9 The Ferron fluvial-deltaic system was deposited during a widespread regression of the Western Interior Seaway as thrust-belt sediments were shed eastward and accumulated along the margin of a rapidly evolving foreland basin during Late Cretaceous (Turonian) time.10,11 The Ferron sandstone is composed of two distinct clastic wedges:11,12 an early wedge derived from the northwest (the Clawson and Washboard sandstones) and a later wedge derived from the southwest (the Ferron clastic wedge). Marine shales divide the Ferron clastic wedge into five sandstone-rich tongues, each comprising a delta-front sandstone body overlaid by a coal (Fig. 1).13 The tongues are as much as 100 ft thick and extend basinward 3 to 30 mi. Early tongues (numbers 1 to 3) step seaward, whereas later tongues (numbers 4 and 5) stack vertically or step landward. Each tongue contains many upward-coarsening and upward-shoaling shallow-marine successions4,5 or parasequences.14 Individual parasequences are 15 to 45 ft thick and extend basinward 1/2 to 5 mi. Within each tongue a nonconformity, which is marked by an incised fluvial system and an abrupt basinward shift in facies, separates underlying progradational-to-aggradational parasequences from overlying aggradational-to-backstepping parasequences.6 Patterns of Stratal Architecture. The spatial arrangement of facies within tongues is related to the stratigraphic position within the Ferron clastic wedge (Fig. 1).4,5 In seaward-stepping tongues, sandstone is preserved mainly within the shallow-marine facies tract. The shallow-marine deposits are broadly lenticular parasequences separated by thin marine mudstones. Individual parasequences (as much as 30 ft thick and 3 mi long) stack progradationally to aggradationally, forming composite delta-front bodies (as much as 100 ft thick and 30 mi long in the dip direction). These delta-front sandstone bodies are locally incised and replaced by homogeneous ribbon-like sandstone bodies that are as much as 80 ft thick and 1/2 mi wide. The crosscutting sandstone body comprises many channel-form sandstone bodies that are as much as 25 ft thick and approximately 30 to 700 ft wide. The channel-form bodies are similar in scale and structure to channel stories defined by Allen;15 they are interpreted to be deposits of fluvial channels and bars. The channel-form bodies are thin relative to the crosscutting body, and they do not interfinger with adjacent shallow-marine strata. Thus, the channel-form bodies are interpreted to be deposits of a fluvial system that aggraded within an incised valley.7 Although the volume of valley-fill sandstone is small compared with the volume of the shallow-marine sandstone, valley fills may connect or segregate reservoir units. This is the setting of the Interstate 70 locality (Ferron sandstone cycle 2, Fig. 1).


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 6-31
Author(s):  
Nora M. Nieminski ◽  
Cari L. Johnson

Range Creek Canyon, located within the Book Cliffs of eastern Utah, contains some of the most abundant and well-preserved archaeological sites in North America. Its cliffs and landscapes provide a canvas for rock art panels and a foundation for granaries, ruins, and artifacts of the prehistoric Fremont Indians. In order to place these Range Creek sites within a geologic context, an illustrated geologic field guide was created for the general public. The guide focuses on the major bedrock formations that crop out in the canyon, as well as many indicators that facilitate geologic interpretation of these rocks. Outcrops of the Paleogene Flagstaff and Colton Formations (~58 to 48 million years old) in Range Creek Canyon were investigated in order to interpret their depositional environments. The lacustrine Flagstaff Limestone contains limestone beds and fossils of freshwater gastropods, oysters, and turtles indicative of lake environments. The unit coarsens upward with an increase of interbedded sandstone, which was deposited in and near ancient river channels. This trend suggests dynamic levels of the ancient lake, with overall encroachment of river systems near the contact with the Colton Formation. The fluvial Colton Formation is characterized by discontinuous, stacked beds of sandstone, representing a succession of migrating river channels and floodplain deposits. The Colton Formation exhibits a general upward trend of increased grain size and increased channel belt (continuous sandstone beds) frequency and lateral extent, implying a transition to higher energy river systems through time. These dynamic, ancient rivers may have been flowing generally northward into Eocene Lake Uinta, recorded in deposits of the Green River Formation north of Range Creek Canyon.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 142-157
Author(s):  
Ismael Ferrusquía-Villafranca ◽  
José Ramón Torres-Hernández ◽  
José E. Ruiz-González ◽  
Enrique Martínez-Hernández

The discrimination/characterization of depositional systems recorded in formal lithostratigraphic, Cenozoic, continental, epiclastic units of Mexico, is largely a pending task, notwithstanding its great academic and economic importance. Contributing to fill this gap, we present a first approach to discriminate and characterize the depositional systems of the late Eocene Yolomécatl Formation, which fills the namesake, triangle-shaped tectonic basin, and carries the southernmost Paleogene vertebrate fauna of North America. The study area lies between 17°25’–17°30’ North Latitude and 97°29’–97°36’ West Longitude, and between 2000–2500 m a.s.l.; the federal highway 125 traverses it; Santiago Yolomécatl is the main town. The Yolomécatl Formation is at least 650 m thick, although the continuous thickness measured in the principal reference section is much less (~250 m); it includes fluvial and lake depositional systems sparsely interbedded by tuff sheets (a system per se). The fluvial system consists of 1) Gmm, Gmg, Gcm lithofacies: alluvial fans and related deposits; 2) Gm, Gh, Gp, Gt, St, Sp lithofacies: channel lag deposits; 3) Sr, Sh, Sl, Fl lithofacies: floodplain deposits. The (clastic) lacustrine system includes: 1) Ll, Lsm, Lm lithofacies: offshore deposits; 2) Ll, Lsm lithofacies: playa lake and mud flats deposits. This large thickness of this unit indicates superposition of fluvial/lacustrine systems, and sparse pyroclastic emplacements that took place in a basin gradually subsiding with sedimentation, under humid to subhumid conditions, probably interrupted by seasonal dryness. Finally, the tectonic setting of the Yolomécatl Basin, indicates that its genesis and development are related to the dynamics of the regional, left-lateral strike-slip Tamazulapam fault, which is also regarded as the boundary between the Mixteca (west) and Oaxaca (east) terranes.


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